THE PROBLEM WITH RETIREMENT
THE PROBLEM WITH RETIREMENT
I like not having to work.
Being able to sleep in on most mornings due to alarm clocks/ devices not
activating is fabulous. The fact that I'll never wear a tie again is
'empowering' (sorry, couldn't help myself). Having the ability to put off until
tomorrow what I don't feel like doing today still thrills me........and, FYI,
I'm becoming quite skilled at that. In fact, much of the post-sixty world I
inhabit is pretty damn user-friendly and bloody pleasant............ to a
degree.
However, I draw the line
somewhere short of 'fantastic' when evaluating 'retirement' so far. There is a
dark region in the post-work terrain that you never hear about from us oldies.
We're too busy being vociferous about just how dreamy the big R is to any
punters unfortunate enough to be in the way. But the dim light exists and it can't
be ignored.
The problem is a simple, yet
ironic, one. Freed from the constraints of time and place (associated with the
world of work) to a significant extent, the retiree is able to do all the
things that he/ she craved.....within reason, of course. But the kicker is that
all the other post-employment fuckers have exactly the same idea. Wherever you
go and whatever you do, it seems that the only people you run into are old
bastards like yourself.
Middle-aged
people cease to exist, school-age kiddos must have been shot by white hunters
whilst Gen-Yers certainly look like they've disappeared up their own arses. Far
from opening up a bold and exciting Utopia, retirement heralds a world where
you see mirror images of yourself and, on many occasions, that can be a most
disconcerting sight.
Not only does the social
milieu downsize in one's retirement but Lexicon Lite introduces himself as a
new and now frequently present companion.
Conversations with punters
quickly focus on listening to endless recounts of breaching whale sightings,
food stories, malady descriptions/ disease stagings, oral reviews of pommie/
Scandinavian TV pot-boilers and grand-kiddy updates. It's as if the annals of
human existence can be whittled down to sea mammals, nourishment, media soaps,
rate-your-doctors and fertilising tomorrow's leaders......... well, in 2017 at
least. Lexi has a lot to answer for.
My
own retirement ordeal involves this man who seems to always follow me around.
He definitely is older and uglier than me because I can see his reflection in
windows as I make my way to Valhalla.....or the shops. Quite often, I turn
around really quickly to confront the crotchety bastard but he's routinely
quicker than I compute. One fuckin' day I'll catch him.
The receding population sample
and lexicon sit alongside a development of weird behaviour as beacons of the
retiree’s life. The latter may be slower to recognise but it is no less
important.
Once liberated from the shackles
of the workplace and, more significantly, the routine mental regimen that is
required to earn a buck, the punter’s mind begins a journey to exotic
destinations. Whereas the office provided a venue or touchstone for much of the
brain’s activity during the working years, the residence now becomes the field
of dreams. Domestic operations/ procedures that were once considered mundane
now assume a position much greater than their ‘utility’ coefficient.
I’ve noticed that I have an
insatiable urge to arrange wet garments on the clothesline in a systematic and
ordered way, socks need to be bundled together to avoid awkward loners
(’mavericks’, so to speak) and the matrimonial bed definitely isn’t ready for
use unless the doona has a 45 degree fold on the entry side.
The
same tendencies influence recreational pursuits. A game of golf isn’t a game of
golf unless you scout around for abandoned golf balls in the rough and
alongside water hazards. I’m figuring that such behaviour is akin to squirrels
collecting nuts for winter and because I’m in the late autumn of my ‘special’
journey, then these antics are entirely understandable. Of course, there’s an
altruistic perspective here too. If I should predecease Kerry, then she’ll have
more than sufficient hoarded golf balls to tide her over the difficult grieving
period.

I'm having a similar problem with some old, fat, grey haired bastard who has stolen my mirror!
ReplyDeleteI know just what you mean, Clepe.....and you look bloody familiar.
DeleteThe realization that every other retiree has the same mindset is also revealing and diminishing: Head off to the optometrist to pick up specs having planned arrival a moment or two after opening to find two blokes, chatting through all the topics canvassed above, ahead of me I find myself saying "drat!".
ReplyDeleteThinking about taking a walk to the "shops", (well, shop in our case but the name remains the same), because I can or watching the bus go up the hill to the nearest shopping center and running a compare & contract evaluation of catching the bus versus motorcycling.
Realizing, after all that time of partially watched, caught up on, missed stuff, that the, (almost inevitably), repeated programs on television in the evening are again repeated the following morning.
Look at the clock in the morning, immediately comparing what I am doing with what I would've been doing in the work life and still getting up much earlier than needed through a mix of guilt and desire to "not waste it" even though it's school holiday time in the working world.
These things make up a large part of the complex self negotiation that is the post work life of someone who isn't living on the pension alone.
I know where you're at, Ray....trust me. Retirement is good but it does have its limitations.
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